Beryllium is a hard, lightweight metal used in military
hardware, cars and trucks, dental work, electronics, computers and cell
phones. Brush Wellman, Inc., headquartered in Cleveland, is by far the world's
largest manufacturer of beryllium products. The company's largest production
plant is located in Elmore, Ohio near Toledo.

Working with beryllium creates toxic dust and fumes. People exposed to beryllium
dust or fumes can develop chronic beryllium disease or lung cancer. Beryllium
disease is too often fatal and there is no cure. In 1997, a government study
found that one-tenth of the workers at Brush's Elmore plant either has beryllium
disease or is beryllium-sensitized, indicating they are in danger of developing
the disease.

You don't have to be a beryllium worker to get beryllium disease. Some contract
workers at beryllium plants, dental lab technicians, automotive manufacture
workers, spouses of beryllium workers, and neighbor of beryllium plants
have developed beryllium disease.

There is no known safe level of beryllium exposure. Fortunately, beryllium
disease is preventable. Eliminating beryllium exposure eliminates the disease.

ELMORE -- "'It's worrisome; it's very worrisome.'
Bernadette Eriksen lives in Elmore, Ohio, where the material engineering company Brush Wellman operates the world's largest manufacturing plant for beryllium, a metal used to make parts found in nuclear weapons, golf clubs and computer chips.
During manufacturing it produces a toxic dust. Exposure can cause an incurable, often-fatal lung disease and possibly cancer, Keteyian reports.
In 2001, in response to community concerns, the CDC began looking at whether beryllium dust from the plant was a health hazard. By 2005, CDC scientists pledged a thorough investigation - with blood tests for up to 200 residents and household dust readings," CBS News. Published April 10.

ELMORE -- "Employees at Brush Wellman are really excited about the future of their company. In 2005, Brush Wellman was awarded a $9 million contract from the Department of Defense to engineer and design a new production facility... If the plant has had any downfalls, especially as of late, it would have to be with the Ohio EPA. The plant, which is mostly a mining and refining facility, was disciplined by the EPA in 2003 and 2004 for failing to report on equipment and air emissions," Chauncey Alcorn, Sandusky Register.

LORAIN -- "Crews working on a gas line near West First Street and Hamilton Avenue yesterday afternoon disturbed beryllium that had been buried at the site of the former Brush plant since the 1940s, according to city officials.
Lorain Fire Department Chief Tom Brown said workers from Columbia Gas noticed some discolored material and were concerned it could be beryllium," Megan King, Lorain Morning Journal.

ELMORE -- "Brush Wellman Inc. said yesterday it was pleased that a federal health agency found no indication of blood sensitization to beryllium during a recent round of testing.
Samples were drawn in the summer from 18 Elmore-area residents who voluntarily agreed to have their blood analyzed by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, a sister agency of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention," Toledo Blade.

COLUMBUS -- "In an
extremely rare move, the Ohio Supreme Court yesterday reversed itself,
undoing the impact of two prior rulings allowing employees who work for
years while fighting debilitating injuries to receive greater benefits...
The decision overturns the effect of the 1998 ruling that allowed former
Brush Wellman employee Galin 'Butch' Lemke, a leading activist for victims
of beryllium disease, to collect benefits from the Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation based on the higher salary he was earning immediately before
he became disabled. That was two decades after he left Brush," Jim
Provance, Toledo Blade.

BOWLING
GREEN -- "Remediation plans for a former beryllium production plant
near Luckey do not call for cleaning up or removing the buildings on the
site, but the Army Corps of Engineers now says it will test the soil beneath
the buildings and 'determine if further action is needed...' The Corps
said it found small amounts of beryllium in some of the buildings, but
found no evidence of a release or threat of a release into the environment.
'The Corps of Engineers will evaluate the sample results to determine
if further action is necessary,' the agency said in its written response
to Mr. Espen's query. Larry Chako, environmental director for Brush Wellman's
Elmore plant, attended the meeting in support of concerned community members.
He said Brush Wellman favors a total site cleanup at Luckey. 'We feel
that is the right thing to do and the prudent thing to do,' he told the
group," Jennifer Feehan, Toledo Blade.

CHICAGO, IL -- "'The very agency charged with safeguarding health and safety in the workplace is failing to protect its own workers,' Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.) wrote this week to Labor Secretary Elaine Chao, whose department oversees OSHA. Miller wants OSHA to detail the safety steps it is taking. His letter to Chao also was signed by Rep. Major Owens (D-N.Y.), and the watchdog groups Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility and the FIGHT Project sent similar letters. The Tribune reported last month that at least three OSHA employees developed blood abnormalities after conducting inspections in facilities handling beryllium, a lightweight metal whose dust can cause an often-fatal lung disease. . .'OSHA inspectors only spend a small time in these facilities,' founder Ron Hayes wrote to Chao. 'I'm worried about the workers,' who spend much more time in the facilities. FIGHT stands for Families in Grief Holding Together," Sam Roe, Chicago Tribune.

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA -- "The Daily Telegraph revealed yesterday how
3000 servicemen and women came into contact with beryllium dust, which can
cause fatal lung disease, between the 1950s and 1985. Despite the health
dangers being suspected as early as the 1950s, sailors on HMAS Supply and
HMAS Melbourne were exposed until 1985. Beryllium was contained in tools
called jason pistols which were used to strip paint and clean the ships'
hulls. The navy and the Department of Defence have begun an inquiry. Beryllium
dust, a heavy metal, scars the lungs causing shortness of breath and kills
2 to 6 per cent of those exposed," Vanessa McCausland, Sydney Daily Telegraph.

WASHINGTON D.C. -- "The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration,
long criticized for downplaying the dangers of beryllium, has discovered
that several of its employees have been affected by exposure to the deadly
metal. The Tribune has learned that ongoing medical testing shows that at
least three OSHA workers have developed blood abnormalities linked to beryllium
exposure--the first such cases at the agency. The workers are thought to
have been exposed while conducting safety inspections in industries using
beryllium, a lightweight metal whose dust can cause an often-fatal lung
disease. The private beryllium industry and some U.S. military facilities
have been testing their workers since the 1990s, often discovering cases
of beryllium disease where there was thought to be none," Sam Roe, Chicago
Tribune.

ELMORE -- "The violations, which occurred between 1980 and 2004, included failing to monitor or record information related to more than 15 pieces of emission-control equipment and the loss of data logs for one device between Nov. 15, 2000, and Jan. 17, 2001, [Dina Pierce, an Ohio EPA spokesperson] said. Brush Wellman also failed to properly monitor emissions of carbon monoxide for an arc furnace and emissions of nitrogen oxide for a copper-beryllium coil strip pickling line, according to EPA. Ms. Pierce said the company did not disclose in its original permit application for the furnace, issued in 1980, that it anticipated releasing more than 250 tons of carbon monoxide per year," Toledo Blade.

COLUMBUS -- "In a victory for Brush Wellman, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled yesterday that up to 7,000 contract workers who may have been exposed to unsafe levels of toxic beryllium dust at the company's plant near Elmore cannot file a class-action lawsuit against the firm. The workers' lawsuit cannot be certified as a class action because the proposed members are not "cohesive," Republican Justice Maureen O'Connor wrote for the 5-2 majority. The ruling overturned a lower-court decision," James Drew, Toledo Blade.

CINCINNATI -- "'We would like to see no dental lab using beryllium in dental products,' Ohio Citizen Action spokeswoman Sandy Buchanan said. 'It's not necessary. The risks are high to dental technicians who have to grind up the mineral. There are safer substitutes available.' Ohio Citizen Action claims there's no reason dental labs should use beryllium. Girone contacted 10 Tri-State labs that said they don't use beryllium products. But that doesn't mean your dentist doesn't. Products can be purchased on the Internet, and suppliers send from all over. 'I believe, for most of them, it's a cost factor,' Buchanan said. 'It's cheaper than precious metals they might use in their dental supplies,'" Cincinnati TV 5 News.

WASHINGTON, DC -- "A uranium plant worker from southern Ohio who has deadly beryllium disease says employees have suspected for years that they were being exposed to the toxic metal. The U.S. Energy Department had not thought the metal was present at the Piketon, Ohio, plant, believing it was only found in areas of a sister plant in Paducah, Ky., where old weapons work had been performed. Agency officials said this week that aluminum blades used to produce enriched uranium at Piketon contained beryllium," Malia Rulon, Associated Press.

ELMORE -- "The sampling in Elmore, a village of 1,426 people about 18 miles southeast of Toledo, could begin later this year, once a public comment period is completed Aug. 15. Consent of homeowners will be required for voluntary participation. Crews of two to three people will visit homes, spending about two hours interviewing the residents and taking samples to test for beryllium dust. The project is expected to take several weeks, [Peter Kowalski, an environmental health specialist at the U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry] said. 'We can collect samples in every home because of the logistics,' Mr. Kowalski said, adding that the agency wants to sample most homes adjacent to the plant. . . .Reports to homeowners with individual results and to the community at large won’t go out until three to six months after the sampling is completed," Len Boselovic, Toledo Blade.

Beryllium air emissions, from Brush Wellman's Elmore plant, in pounds.

ELMORE -- "Brush Wellman has slashed by 96% the beryllium air pollution coming from their Elmore, Ohio plant, according to company reports to the U.S. EPA. Brush Wellman is the world's predominant beryllium processor. In 2002, the Elmore plant put 38 pounds of beryllium into the air, down from 889 pounds in 1994. This stunning improvement, which began in 2000, goes well beyond the weak requirements of federal and state regulations," Amy Ryder, Ohio Citizen Action.

ELMORE -- "The Ohio Supreme Court yesterday dismissed
a case filed by a former Brush Wellman employee and an outspoken critic
who accused the company of knowingly giving him an incurable disease. Gary
Renwand, Jr., asked that his case be dismissed because he accepted a settlement
from the company. Mr. Renwand said he was forced to dismiss the suit because
workers cannot receive a compensation package offered by the federal government
if they sue the company. "You can’t fight the federal government. And fighting
Brush Wellman is like fighting the federal government. The way things are
going, it was clear we weren’t going to win," said Mr. Renwand, whose father
also has beryllium disease. "I wasn’t in it just for the money. Brush is
in the wrong,"" Kelly Lecker, The Toledo Blade.

ELMORE -- Gary Renwand, Jr., watches his father steal
breaths from a portable oxygen machine he takes everywhere he goes. He sees
him go in and out of the hospital, battling heart and lung problems stemming
from a disease he got from 35 years of working around beryllium dust at
Brush Wellmans plant in Elmore. Mr. Renwand wants Brush Wellman to
pay for putting him and others at risk for developing a potentially deadly
disease, and for the fear he faces now. He maintained that the company not
only knew about the risks, but ignored them while putting production ahead
of safety," Kelly Lecker, The Toledo Blade.

Nov 8, 2002:
Court backs Brush in
suit over beryllium at Ohio plant

CLEVELAND -- "An Ohio appeals court has ruled that Brush
Engineered Materials Inc. did not disregard worker safety at a beryllium
processing plant. The Cleveland company said the victory may help it settle
remaining Ohio lawsuits claiming it had hidden from workers the dangers
of working with beryllium. This year, after winning a series of court cases,
Brush settled with 87 plaintiffs who had filed lawsuits related to the health
effects of beryllium. It still faces 49 cases, 27 of them in its home state,"
Thomas W. Gerdel, Cleveland Plain Dealer.

CLEVELAND -- "A judge ruled against a former Brush Wellman
employee who said the company agreed to continue paying him after he contracted
beryllium disease, then cut off his salary. The Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
judge granted summary judgment Wednesday in favor of Brush Wellman and against
David Norgard of Manitou Beach, Mich. The court ruled that under the contract,
Mr. Norgard, who worked at Brush’s Elmore plant, was to be paid if he was
unable to work or if the company could not provide him with a job. 'The
judge ruled he had to work unless he was totally disabled,' said Louise
Roselle, an attorney for Mr. Norgard," Kelly Lecker, Toledo Blade.

CLEVELAND -- "The breach-of-contract trial between the
company and David Norgard of Manitou Beach, Mich., is expected to last less
than a week in Cuyahoga Common Pleas Court. At issue is a contract Mr. Norgard
says he signed with Brush Wellman that called for the company to continue
paying him a salary after he contracted beryllium disease in 1992. 'In 1992,
when he was diagnosed with chronic beryllium disease, they told him, 'Go
home and get on with your life, and we will continue to pay you,'' and then
cut him off, said Louise Roselle, a Cincinnati attorney representing Mr.
Norgard," Kelly Lecker, Toledo Blade.

ELMORE -- "A statewide grassroots group known for its
scathing attacks on Brush Wellman for its safety practices has deemed the
local plant 'much safer' for employees and neighbors than in 1999. Ohio
Citizen Action member Amy Ryder sent a letter to Brush Chairman Gordon Harnett
praising the company. 'We are satisfied that your company has taken significant
steps at the facility to make it much safer for employees and neighbors,'
she wrote in the letter, which was sent Monday," Jennifer Funk, Port
Clinton News Herald.

FREMONT -- "I feel that our Congress should amend the
Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act to include
life and health insurance for people who have chronic beryllium disease
and the cancer victims of the uranium workers along with their spouses and,
if any, dependent children. After all, if the spouse is staying home to
take care of their sick, then they deserve it too. Please keep in mind that
if you work with beryllium or uranium or know of someone who does, there
is no way of knowing what the beryllium workers or the uranium workers fate
may be five, ten, or even thirty years from now," Michael Bauer.

CLEVELAND -- "Ohio Citizen Action said today the Brush
Wellman beryllium plant in Elmore, Ohio, is "much safer" for employees and
neighbors than in 1999. In a letter to Brush Chairman Gordon Harnett, Ohio
Citizen Action’s Amy Ryder said the group had successfully completed the
good-neighbor campaign it began three years ago. 'Since disease and death
still haunt this community, it would be unseemly to use the word 'victory,'
Ryder said. 'Brush Wellman’s recent improvements, however, go significantly
beyond what the weak federal and state regulatory system require. Elmore
is now a much safer place.' In the letter, Ryder cited the closing of the
pure beryllium unit at the plant, which has reduced total beryllium air
emissions by 77%. The company also created transition zones within the plant
to prevent cross-contamination of beryllium within the different parts of
the facility. All production employees are now required to wear respirators
and go through decontamination at the end of a shift, including the use
of air showers and separate locker rooms for storing work and street clothing,"
release, Ohio Citizen Action.Letter to Gordon
HarnettKey events in
the Brush Wellman good-neighbor campaignA photo review
of the campaign

PORT CLINTON -- "Though the number of Brush Wellman's
full-time workers are down, there were still enough to retain a tax abatement
for another year on $100 million in real and personal property. . . At its
peak in 2001, Brush Wellman had 838 full-time employees. By mid-2002, however,
that number had dropped to 578. . .Brush officials have said in the past
the reason for the economic decline was the demise of the telecommunications
industry. The company used to rely heavily on military contracts, but now
that only makes up about 5 percent of the Elmore plant's production. Instead,
it is focused on products for the automotive and telecommunications industries
-- which up until last year were seeing an economic boom. Now, though, the
Elmore plant is producing about 40 percent of what it's actually capable
of, and cutting costs to stay stable," Jennifer Funk, Port Clinton
News Herald.

WASHINGTON, DC -- "Under pressure from Congress, the
Bush administration has decided to reverse policy and quit fighting illness
compensation claims from Cold War-era nuclear weapons workers exposed to
toxic chemicals. The new rules reverse a decades-old policy and differ from
a draft proposal circulated earlier this year that allowed contractors to
contest such findings and even said the Energy Department would help pay
for appeals. The regulations could affect more than 12,000 workers currently
seeking help from the Energy Department in getting compensation. Most of
the affected workers live in states with large DOE facilities, including
Ohio," Nancy Zuckerbrod, Associated Press.

ELMORE -- "A federal public health agency plans
to test the homes of beryllium workers to see if beryllium is leaving the
Brush Wellman plant. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
told residents at meetings yesterday that air emissions from the Brush Wellman
plant are not posing a health hazard for neighbors. But the toxic substances
agency could not determine whether beryllium is getting into workers’ homes
from their clothes or bodies. The agency is developing tests to look for
beryllium in homes. Bernadette Eriksen, who lives near the plant, asked
the agency to do its own testing and not rely on data from Brush Wellman
and the EPA," Kelly Lecker, Toledo Blade.

ELMORE -- "Bernadette Eriksen, who lives near the
plant, said she’s angry the agency didn’t test people near the plant or
do their own air sampling. 'I never saw them out here testing any air. I
never heard anyone questioning the neighbors. I just think based on the
evidence I saw it’s being brushed under the rug again,' she said. The public
health agency, part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
will have two public hearings Wednesday to release the results of the study
to residents. The meetings will be from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 p.m. at the
Elmore Community Center, 410 Clinton St.," Kelly Lecker, Toledo
Blade.

ELMORE -- "The decline of the telecommunications
industry has pulled Brush Wellman down with it -- and company officials
for the Elmore plant are mum about the future. The corporation, however,
received somewhat good news with the second-quarter earnings report, released
Thursday by parent company Brush Engineering Materials Inc. That report
showed while the Cleveland-based corporation was about 22 percent off its
sales in the second quarter compared to the same time last year, numbers
did improve from the first quarter 2002. That's somewhat encouraging, especially
considering numbers have steadily climbed since a woeful fourth quarter
to end 2001," Jennifer Funk, Port Clinton News Herald.

CLEVELAND -- "Chemical company Brush Engineered Materials
Inc. on Thursday posted a second-quarter loss, reversing a profit a year
earlier, as telecommunications market weakness cut into demand for its beryllium
products. The Cleveland-based company reported a loss of $2.0 million, or
12 cents a share, compared with earnings of $1.3 million, or 8 cents a share,
a year ago. Brush, the producer of beryllium products used in the computer
and electronics industries, said its sales declined 22 percent to $100.7
million from $128.5 million a year earlier. The company said its third-quarter
sales could dip by as much as 5 percent from the second-quarter due to slow
demand from technology and telecommunications customers. Shares were down
about 2 percent, or 21 cents, to $9.64 in Thursday afternoon trade in New
York Stock Exchange. Stock have shed about 72 percent from a year earlier,"
Reuters.Statement
by Brush Wellman.Brush
Wellman conference call on 2d quarter earnings

ELMORE -- "The paper, titled, 'Ultrafine Beryllium Number
Concentration as a Possible Metric for Chronic Beryllium Disease Risk' was
published in the May 2001 edition of Applied Occupational and Environmental
Hygiene. The paper summarizes a study by Brush Wellman and NIOSH to
identify an appropriate measure of assessing potential risk of work-related
CBD," Port Clinton News Herald.

CLEVELAND -- "At its meeting on May 7, the Brush Engineered
Materials Inc. Board of Directors (NYSE:BW - News) requested and received
from Gordon Harnett, Chairman and CEO, a commitment to delay any potential
early retirement for a duration of several years. . . . [Company president
William] Seelbach originally came to the organization as a potential successor
to Mr. Harnett, and given Mr. Harnett's commitment to the Board, he has
decided that the delayed opportunity is inconsistent with his personal objectives.
As a result, he has decided to leave the organization," release, Brush
Wellman.

COLUMBUS -- "The Supreme Court overturned a state appeals
court ruling that said the statute of limitations had run out in 1997 when
David Norgard and his wife, Theresa, filed an intentional tort lawsuit against
Brush, a Cleveland-based firm. . . A one-vote majority of the state Supreme
Court agreed with Mr. Norgard. 'By applying the ... rule as we do, we take
away the advantage of employers who conceal harmful information until it
is too late for their employees to use it,' wrote Justice Francis Sweeney,
a Democrat. . . .'Hopefully, the decision has set a precedent and opened
up some doors for a lot of injured workers across the state,' Mr. Norgard
said yesterday. 'That is even more exciting than my own case,'" James
Drew, Toledo Blade.

WASHINGTON, DC -- "In a rare move, federal regulators
are warning thousands of dental laboratories that they might be exposing
workers to harmful levels of beryllium, a highly toxic metal used in the
production of crowns and bridges. The warning, to be issued Tuesday in the
form of a health hazard bulletin, states that several dental lab technicians
have contracted a potentially fatal lung disease after inhaling tiny amounts
of beryllium dust. . . OSHA's hazard bulletin recommends that dental labs
use ventilation, respirators and protective clothing to limit beryllium
dust exposure. Employers should also regularly test the air and, where possible,
use substitutes for beryllium," Sam Roe, Chicago Tribune.

The Chicago Tribune articles on beryllium in dentistry, attributed to
Sam Roe, are based on original
research by Amy Ryder, Ohio Citizen Action. The Toledo Blade
series on beryllium (March 3 - April 2, 1999), bylined by Sam Roe, was based
on original research by Theresa Norgard, University of Michigan.

ELMORE -- "The explosion occurred about 12:30 a.m. Sunday
in the old cast shop, which is in the Northwest quadrant of the plant, said
plant manager Art Pepper this morning. There were four people working in
the cast shop at the time, he said. They reported that while pouring molten
metal, which contained a copper beryllium alloy, the machinery malfunctioned
and continued to pour when it should have stopped, Pepper said. The metal
came into contact with water, which caused steam and the explosion, he said,"
Port Clinton News Herald.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- "The lawmakers assailed the
Pentagon for ignoring federal health guidelines that recommend blood tests
for workers exposed to beryllium, a lightweight metal whose dust can cause
an often fatal lung disease. Testing in other industries has revealed dozens
of illnesses. 'This is a national disgrace the way the Department of Defense
has treated these workers,' said Rep. Tom Udall, a Democrat from New Mexico
. . . Five congressmen contacted by the Tribune said they wanted the Defense
Department to take action. They are Udall and Reps. Charlie Gonzalez (D-Texas),
Paul Kanjorski (D-Penn.), Ted Strickland (D-Ohio) and Ciro Rodriguez (D-Texas),"
Sam Roe, Chicago Tribune.

WASHINGTON, DC -- "U.S. military personnel have been exposed
to the highly toxic metal beryllium at dozens of Army, Air Force, Navy and
Marine Corps facilities, with some levels exceeding legal safety limits,
a Tribune investigation has found. . . . Early detection is important because
it allows treatments that can attempt to limit lung damage," Sam Roe,
Chicago Tribune.

TOLEDO -- "In this instance, employee David Norgard, 46,
diagnosed in 1992 with chronic beryllium disease, didn’t find out until
1995 that Brush Wellman hadn’t told him and other workers all it could have
about the causes of beryllium disease and the levels of exposure to it that
were safe. He filed his lawsuit within two years of finding out, but a trial
court and a court of appeals panel ruled that, as Brush Wellman had argued,
he should have filed his suit in 1994, two years after he was diagnosed
but well before he knew the extent of the company’s perfidy," editorial,
Toledo Blade.

COLUMBUS -- "Yesterday, [former Brush worker Dave] Norgard’s
attorneys told the justices that the appeals court misinterpreted state
law and that the two-year statute of limitations started to tick in 1995,
when Mr. Norgard discovered 'facts' from an Arizona attorney supporting
allegations that Brush intentionally withheld information about the causes
of chronic beryllium disease. 'He had no reason to know that his employer
had intentionally caused his illness until 1995,' Mr. DeMarco told the seven-member
court, which asked both sides several questions about previous decisions
on intentional tort disputes.," James Drew, Toledo Blade.

COLUMBUS -- "'Brush was not receptive nor supportive of
the research that the support group was performing,' recalled [Dave] Norgard,
in a 2000 affidavit. 'Several times I was told by Brush to stop snooping
around and stop talking to regulatory agencies and members of Congress.'
. . . It was from [attorney James] Heckbert that Mr. Norgard learned that
'for decades Brush Wellman withheld from its employees information about
the causes of beryllium-related diseases and the acceptable levels of beryllium
to which an employee could be exposed without harm,' according to state
court records filed by Mr. Norgard’s attorneys," James Drew, Toledo
Blade.

ELMORE -- "As site leader, [Arthur] Pepper has responsibility
for the plant's health and safety, quality, accounting, information systems,
human resources, engineering, and internal and external communications,
including community relations. 'We're excited to introduce Art to the local
community, and we look forward to him getting out and meeting our neighbors
throughout the area,' [Donald Klimkowicz, vice president, operations] said.
'Our company is committed to enhancing its communications with the community,
and Art will take a leadership role in that effort,'" Port Clinton
News Herald.

GENOA -- "Dr. Kathy Fagan described what can be done to
prevent Chronic Beryllium Disease. She said, 'CBD can only occur if someone
is exposed to beryllium by breathing the dust or fumes into the lungs. Thus,
preventing the release of beryllium dust or fumes is the best way to prevent
the disease. Companies must control, enclose and ventilate their operations.
Workers must use protective equipment and respirators. Communities must
make sure that beryllium dust and fumes from factories are not being released
into the community,'" Amy Ryder, Margaret Priebe, Ohio Citizen
Action, 23KB .doc.

ELMORE -- "Beryllium dust can cause an incurable, fatal
lung disease if inhaled. Brush Wellman processes beryllium, long used in
nuclear weapons. Some workers said they are worried that beryllium dust
would leave the dryers through the vents and expose workers, and that workers
who touch the clothes might be exposed to beryllium. [Karen Burnett, an
international representative for the UNITE union] said she isn’t sure if
union members would refuse to wash the uniforms. 'Those are issues we feel
we need to get addressed,' she said. . . . Amy Ryder, director of the Cleveland
office of Ohio’s largest environmental group, Ohio Citizen Action, said
there is reason to be concerned. She said her agency studied the homes and
cars of beryllium workers and found that beryllium is carried off site,
so it is logical to assume there will be beryllium on the uniforms that
could be left in washers and dryers," Kelly Lecker, Toledo Blade.

OAK RIDGE -- "The new test lab will receive blood
samples from Y-12 and workers at more than a dozen other DOE facilities
around the United States. Dr. Donna Cragle, epidemiology chief at the Oak
Ridge Institute for Science and Education and one of the nation's top experts
in beryllium screening, said the Oak Ridge facilities are capable of processing
more than 3,000 cases per year," Frank Munger, Knoxville News Sentinel.

GENOA -- "The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry's participation in an activist meeting on beryllium Tuesday 'smacks
of collusion,' said a Brush Wellman spokesman Wednesday. . . . In October,
ATSDR representatives announced at an Elmore meeting they would conduct
a follow-up exposure investigation, talking to volunteers in 30 local households.
Because of low participation at the October meeting, ATSDR representative
Loretta Bush returned to Tuesday night's meeting in Genoa sponsored by Ohio
Citizen Action to ask for more volunteers," Port Clinton News Herald.

GENOA -- "A standing room only crowd Tuesday night
weighed in on what they thought needed to be done to protect the safety
of workers and residents near the Elmore Brush Wellman plant. . . .Dr. Kathleen
Fagan, an expert on work-related toxic exposure out of Lorain, was at the
meeting to speak about the symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of CBD and
take related questions. Fagan also is on the board of directors for Ohio
Citizen Action and is a professor at Case Western Reserve. 'We don't know
how to cure it, so the most important thing is to try to prevent it,' she
told the audience of about 50," Jennifer Funk, Port Clinton News
Herald.10 more
photos by Nate Steffans.

GENOA -- "Dr. Kathleen Fagan will join us to discuss
the dangers of living near a beryllium plant and beryllium disease. Dr.
Fagan is a occupational medicine specialist, trained in work related toxic
exposures and recognized by National Institute of Occupational Safety and
Health as a beryllium expert. This meeting is open to the public,"
Amy Ryder, Ohio Citizen Action.